My thesis aims to explore dual consciousness and its connection to female sexuality in Margaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace (1996). By examining the protagonist Grace Marks' relationships with other female characters and with her doctor Simon Jordan, I argue that the psychic split in the novel is not a legal or a medical case study of murder or schizophrenia, but a socio-cultural reflection of the gender constructions and dynamics of the setting. It is my understanding that this duality is a result of a cultural and social othering, in which both Grace Marks and Dr. Jordan play a crucial part.BSc/BAAnglisztikaB
Postmodern fiction demonstrates a suspicion about the narrative status of history. Arguably, its pro...
This thesis examines Atwood's transformation of the crime genre, more particularly the whodunit and ...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
Grace Marks was a convicted double murderer in nineteenth-century Canada. Her case was well known at...
Alias Grace, a novel by Margaret Atwood demonstrates the most sensational murder case of the mid nin...
This analysis of Margaret Atwood's appropriation of history is limited to two of her works, The Hand...
Margaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace, by exploring the story of Grace Marks through an authorial mosa...
Margaret Atwood depicts life memory as a process, a journey into one’s self that results in self-rea...
Bibliography: leaves 53.In the Introduction of this minor dissertation, Margaret Atwood as a post-mo...
In her ninth novel, Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood shifts her perspective on the Canadian past and rec...
The paper investigates the capacity of historiographic metafiction to deal with the internal contrad...
Is there a woman behind the veil? This thesis discusses the importance of clothing, textiles, and ac...
This thesis is a comparative study exploring the theme of the imprisoned female in the three novels ...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.Margaret Atwo...
The object of this thesis is to highlight the main aspects of objectification and alienation of wome...
Postmodern fiction demonstrates a suspicion about the narrative status of history. Arguably, its pro...
This thesis examines Atwood's transformation of the crime genre, more particularly the whodunit and ...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...
Grace Marks was a convicted double murderer in nineteenth-century Canada. Her case was well known at...
Alias Grace, a novel by Margaret Atwood demonstrates the most sensational murder case of the mid nin...
This analysis of Margaret Atwood's appropriation of history is limited to two of her works, The Hand...
Margaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace, by exploring the story of Grace Marks through an authorial mosa...
Margaret Atwood depicts life memory as a process, a journey into one’s self that results in self-rea...
Bibliography: leaves 53.In the Introduction of this minor dissertation, Margaret Atwood as a post-mo...
In her ninth novel, Alias Grace, Margaret Atwood shifts her perspective on the Canadian past and rec...
The paper investigates the capacity of historiographic metafiction to deal with the internal contrad...
Is there a woman behind the veil? This thesis discusses the importance of clothing, textiles, and ac...
This thesis is a comparative study exploring the theme of the imprisoned female in the three novels ...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.Margaret Atwo...
The object of this thesis is to highlight the main aspects of objectification and alienation of wome...
Postmodern fiction demonstrates a suspicion about the narrative status of history. Arguably, its pro...
This thesis examines Atwood's transformation of the crime genre, more particularly the whodunit and ...
In this paper, I analyze Margaret Atwood’s biographical novel Alias Grace which is based on the life...